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Controversy and confusion surround Seoul Olympics. See page 24.
A look at the Amnesty International show that will rock the Coliseum. See page 12.
Poverty in the United States: A legitimate
Boston imposes drinking limits at area schools
BOSTON (UPI) — City officials, enacting unprecedented new regulations against drinking by college students, said they will force administrators to take more responsibility for protecting students and dty residents.
The new rules, announced Sunday, will prohibit college students from bringing more alcohol into their dormitories than they can expect to drink themselves, and require the city's colleges and liquor stores to enforce such limits.
The rules, enacted by the Boston Licensing Board, affect about 20 colleges and universities in the city, covering about 250 dormitories and 20 fraternity houses.
The Licensing Board began formulating the rules after hearings on college drinking and rowdiness last spring, chairwoman Andrea Gargiulo said.
College administrators "must take responsibility for protecting their students and the residents of Boston from the destructive and dangerous consequences of alcohol abuse," Garguilo said.
The regulations, mailed Friday to liquor store owners and college dormitories, bar the delivery of kegs or cases of (See Drinking, page 6)
Artist Krishna Dukes was on campus yesterday, sculpting clay dinosaurs in front of Tommy Trojan. This replica of the cold-blooded reptiles and miniature dinosaur sculptures will be sold by Dukes to interested students. Dukes will be here for the remainder of this week.
trojan
Volume CVII, Number 10 University of Southern California Tuesday, September 20, 1988
LAND OF THE LOST
Women’s center funding denied
Task force appointed to determine student need for proposed services
By Colette Maandig
Staff Writer
University officials rejected a proposal to give $20,000 to the women's resource center planning committee, and instead may appoint a presidential task force to assess the need for a campus center.
If formed, the task force would comprise 13 members and would be headed by Kristine Dillon, associate vice president of student affairs. Its first report would be expected in November, said Cornelius Pings, university provost.
"I don't know if there should be a (women's) resource center," Pings said. "We have a considerable set of operations that already offers the same services that the center would."
Members of the planning committee met Monday to dis-
cuss the future of a women's resource center on campus.
Last April, the administration offered the planning committee $20,000 after rejecting its first request for $300,000 in March, said Connie Horak, director of overseas studies. Horak heads the planning committee.
The $20,000 was offered after the Student Alliance for a Nonsexist Society staged a rally protesting the administration's refusal to fund the project.
"$20,000 is nothing," Horak said. "It's just enough to get activities started this year. But at least with $20,000, you could get some work-study students and a minimal amount of speakers."
Administrators and committee members differed about whether services already available for women at the university would overlap with services of-(See Center, page 17)
Campus
Amnesty presents parking problems in commuter lots
readies for Coliseum concert
Students assemble to sign large banner for human freedom
By Rudi Oliveto
Staff Writer
While some students are anticipating parking problems during Wednesday evening's Amnesty International concert at the Coliseum, university officials are working to ensure trouble* free parking for them on campus.
More than 55,000 people are expected to attend the event, forcing students to move their cars from the Coliseum's Menlo lots to university lots after 4 p.m., said Roy Heidicker, assistant director of Parking Operations.
To accommodate these students, Parking Operations has leased 250 spaces on the east side of the Shrine Auditorium and another lot on Jefferson Boulevard and Vermont Avenue, Heidicker said.
Starting last week, Heidicker's office posted memos on campus informing commuter students of potential parking problems. The memos requested that students leaving before 4 p.m. Wednesday volunteer to park in the Menlo lots when they arrive on campus.
"This way, very few students will have to relocate to campus (See Parking, page 3)
MICHAEL KIM / DAILY TROJAN
Robert Chavez adds his signature to the banner of signatures from students supporting Amnesty International. The banner will be displayed at the organization’s Human Rights Now! concert at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Wednesday night
By Karen Denne
Staff Writer
To show their support for human rights, students began Monday signing a large banner that will be hung outside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for Wednesday night's Amnesty International Concert.
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Two tablecloths with students' signatures will be sewn on either side of a third banner painted with the university logo and the Amnesty International symbol — a candle representing freedom wrapped in barbed wire.
Students grabbed thick markers near Tommy Trojan and scrawled and printed their names in orange, red, green, blue and purple ink across the (See Banner, page 6)

Controversy and confusion surround Seoul Olympics. See page 24.
A look at the Amnesty International show that will rock the Coliseum. See page 12.
Poverty in the United States: A legitimate
Boston imposes drinking limits at area schools
BOSTON (UPI) — City officials, enacting unprecedented new regulations against drinking by college students, said they will force administrators to take more responsibility for protecting students and dty residents.
The new rules, announced Sunday, will prohibit college students from bringing more alcohol into their dormitories than they can expect to drink themselves, and require the city's colleges and liquor stores to enforce such limits.
The rules, enacted by the Boston Licensing Board, affect about 20 colleges and universities in the city, covering about 250 dormitories and 20 fraternity houses.
The Licensing Board began formulating the rules after hearings on college drinking and rowdiness last spring, chairwoman Andrea Gargiulo said.
College administrators "must take responsibility for protecting their students and the residents of Boston from the destructive and dangerous consequences of alcohol abuse," Garguilo said.
The regulations, mailed Friday to liquor store owners and college dormitories, bar the delivery of kegs or cases of (See Drinking, page 6)
Artist Krishna Dukes was on campus yesterday, sculpting clay dinosaurs in front of Tommy Trojan. This replica of the cold-blooded reptiles and miniature dinosaur sculptures will be sold by Dukes to interested students. Dukes will be here for the remainder of this week.
trojan
Volume CVII, Number 10 University of Southern California Tuesday, September 20, 1988
LAND OF THE LOST
Women’s center funding denied
Task force appointed to determine student need for proposed services
By Colette Maandig
Staff Writer
University officials rejected a proposal to give $20,000 to the women's resource center planning committee, and instead may appoint a presidential task force to assess the need for a campus center.
If formed, the task force would comprise 13 members and would be headed by Kristine Dillon, associate vice president of student affairs. Its first report would be expected in November, said Cornelius Pings, university provost.
"I don't know if there should be a (women's) resource center," Pings said. "We have a considerable set of operations that already offers the same services that the center would."
Members of the planning committee met Monday to dis-
cuss the future of a women's resource center on campus.
Last April, the administration offered the planning committee $20,000 after rejecting its first request for $300,000 in March, said Connie Horak, director of overseas studies. Horak heads the planning committee.
The $20,000 was offered after the Student Alliance for a Nonsexist Society staged a rally protesting the administration's refusal to fund the project.
"$20,000 is nothing," Horak said. "It's just enough to get activities started this year. But at least with $20,000, you could get some work-study students and a minimal amount of speakers."
Administrators and committee members differed about whether services already available for women at the university would overlap with services of-(See Center, page 17)
Campus
Amnesty presents parking problems in commuter lots
readies for Coliseum concert
Students assemble to sign large banner for human freedom
By Rudi Oliveto
Staff Writer
While some students are anticipating parking problems during Wednesday evening's Amnesty International concert at the Coliseum, university officials are working to ensure trouble* free parking for them on campus.
More than 55,000 people are expected to attend the event, forcing students to move their cars from the Coliseum's Menlo lots to university lots after 4 p.m., said Roy Heidicker, assistant director of Parking Operations.
To accommodate these students, Parking Operations has leased 250 spaces on the east side of the Shrine Auditorium and another lot on Jefferson Boulevard and Vermont Avenue, Heidicker said.
Starting last week, Heidicker's office posted memos on campus informing commuter students of potential parking problems. The memos requested that students leaving before 4 p.m. Wednesday volunteer to park in the Menlo lots when they arrive on campus.
"This way, very few students will have to relocate to campus (See Parking, page 3)
MICHAEL KIM / DAILY TROJAN
Robert Chavez adds his signature to the banner of signatures from students supporting Amnesty International. The banner will be displayed at the organization’s Human Rights Now! concert at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Wednesday night
By Karen Denne
Staff Writer
To show their support for human rights, students began Monday signing a large banner that will be hung outside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for Wednesday night's Amnesty International Concert.
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Two tablecloths with students' signatures will be sewn on either side of a third banner painted with the university logo and the Amnesty International symbol — a candle representing freedom wrapped in barbed wire.
Students grabbed thick markers near Tommy Trojan and scrawled and printed their names in orange, red, green, blue and purple ink across the (See Banner, page 6)